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10 Dastardly Secret Operations Of The KGB Like the CIA, the Soviet (and now Russian) spy agency known as the KGB has engaged in decades of secret operations across the world, ranging from blackmail to kidnapping. Most of the secrets that we know about the KGB today are because of one man Vasili Mitrokhin. Mitrokhin was an archivist for the KGB for 30 years before he defected to the UK and handed over his 25,000-page archive of secret KGB files. Here are some of the KGB’s most disturbing and outlandish secret operations. 10 Attacks On America’s Infrastructure From 1959–72, the KGB began to photograph US power plants, dams, oil pipelines, and infrastructure for a nefarious operation that would disrupt the power supply to all of New York. Once they picked targets that they thought were vulnerable, the KGB set up a safe house near Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. From there, KGB agents sought to plan and carry out a series of attacks on America’s power systems. ....
December 10, 2020 A Finnish horse is among the new characters residing in the comic pages of the Johnson Newspaper Corp. In October, Johnson Newspaper Corp., which publishes the Watertown Daily Times and other publications, announced that due to an impasse over fees with King Features, owned by Hearst, it would discontinue content from the syndication service. That provided an opening on the funny pages of the Johnson Newspaper group for the Andrews McMeel distributed The strip is the creation of Samuli Lintula (“Samson”) of Finland, who responded to questions from his home in Helsinki sent to him by a Times reporter. ....
A Finnish horse is among the new characters residing in the comic pages of the Johnson Newspaper Corp. In October, Johnson Newspaper Corp., which publishes the Watertown Daily Times and other publications, announced that due to an impasse over fees with King Features, owned by Hearst, it would discontinue content from the syndication service. âAs we navigate the reality of life now during and then after the pandemic, we have decided as a company that it is most prudent, and responsible, to focus our spending on local reporting resources,â Alec E. Johnson, president and chief operating officer at Johnson Newspaper Corp. explained to readers. ....